Holden Caulfield-The Thinking Man
The
Thinking Man
The Catcher In The Rye
Margaret Atwood once described the
thinking man as on who resists, believes survival is a necessity, is isolated
and alienated, and who is aware of the elements that make one's psyche and
physical being disappear. Atwood's "thinking person" is exhibited in Holden
Caulfield through the use of character, plot, & symbolism.
To begin with,
the "thinking person" is portrayed through Holden Caulfield's character. One
of the characteristic's of Atwood's "thinking person" is one of being isolated
and alienated. Holden is a very lonely character. An example that shows this
is his direct reference to David Copperfield in the first paragraph of the
novel when he says "...and all that David Copperfield kind of crap."(pg.1)
When David Copperfield was a child he was alienated from his mother, and was
very lonely. This points to the fact that Holden had a very lonely childhood
and, like David Copperfield, his innocence as well.......
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Approximate Word Count: 923
Approximate Pages: 4 (250 words per double-spaced page)
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